Limited Atonement

Extracts taken from The Reformed Doctrine of Predestination
by Loraine Boettner
Originally posted on Archegos: the Champion
Statement on offsite articles

Statement of Doctrine

In the intention and secret plan of God, Christ died for the elect only, and His death had only an incidental reference to others in so far as they are partakers of common grace. If God elected some and not others to eternal life, then it logically follows that Christ's primary purpose was to redeem the elect.

The Infinite Value of Christ's Atonement

  1. The Atonement is an infinite transaction between the Father and the Son for the salvation of the elect. It is "limited" only in a theological sense because its benefits are applied to the elect only through redemption.

  2. Calvinists do not teach that Christ would have suffered more were the elect a larger number than it is. Christ would have suffered the same for one soul as for a large number or all mankind.

The Atonement's Limited Purpose and Application

  1. The value of the Atonement was sufficient to save all mankind, but it was efficient to save only the elect.

  2. If the Atonement's application is universal, then the inherent value of the Atonement is destroyed since some men are lost.

  3. Arminians limit the work of Christ as certainly as the Calvinists do.

A Perfect Fulfillment of the Law

  1. God demanded perfect obedience of Adam. Adam's failure to obey placed the entire race under the curse of sin, but it did not change God's demand: He still requires perfect obedience.

  2. If Arminianism is correct, then Christ has died for many who are lost.

Ransom

  1. Christ is said to be a ransom for His people -- "The Son of Man came not to be ministered unto but to minister, and to give His life a ransom for many (Matthew 20:28)."

The Divine Purpose in Christ's Sacrifice

  1. If God's purpose was to save all men by Christ's sacrifice, then He is unable or unwilling to accomplish His purpose.

  2. Christ Himself limits the purpose of His death when He said, "I lay down my life for the sheep." (John 10:14, 15)

 


 

Extracts from The Reformed Doctrine of Predestination by Loraine Boettner